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13+ Works 210 Members 9 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: D. Zettwoch, Dan Zettwoch

Series

Works by Dan Zettwoch

Science Comics: Cars: Engines That Move You (2019) — Author; Illustrator; Designer — 111 copies, 3 reviews
Science Comics: Bridges: Engineering Masterpieces (2022) — Author; Illustrator; Designer — 53 copies, 5 reviews
Birdseye Bristoe (2012) 31 copies
Redbird 1.5 3 copies
Redbird #1 2 copies
Redbird #3 1 copy

Associated Works

The Best American Comics 2007 (2007) — Contributor — 383 copies, 5 reviews
The Best American Comics 2009 (2009) — Contributor — 183 copies, 4 reviews
An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories: v .2 (2008) — Contributor — 158 copies, 2 reviews
Kramers Ergot 6 (2006) — Contributor — 97 copies, 2 reviews
SPX: EXPO 2001 (2001) — Contributor — 53 copies
The Best American Comics 2017 (The Best American Series ®) (2017) — Contributor — 46 copies, 2 reviews
Bogus Dead (2002) — Contributor — 19 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Zettwoch, Dan
Birthdate
1977
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Short biography
Dan Zettwoch was born in Louisville, Kentucky - the birthplace of Muhammad Ali and the cheeseburger - in 1977. His grandfather drew comics in the Pacific Theater during WWII and his father did the same while working as a craftsman at the American Telephone & Telegraph Company in the 1970's and 80's. They never got paid to draw comics and transferred their creative efforts to woodworking, painting, and mechanized sculpture. As a child, Dan Zettwoch read the comics most plentiful in the nickel boxes at the Jefferson County Flea Market: the humor publications Cracked and Mad Magazine and low-grade action fare like the motorcross comic Team America and ROM: Spaceknight. Having always been interested in drawing, he started making his own comics, although he rarely moved beyond detailed character dossiers for made-up superhero characters (including special skills, weapons, team affiliation, etc.) and drawing explosive covers for stories that didn't exist. 
Dan moved to St. Louis in 1995 to attend school at Washington University and study mathematics and illustration, and he began discovering comics that he liked better, but which cost more than a nickel. The true power of storytelling - preserving oral histories, world building in three dimensions on paper, communicating technical info along with weird and heartfelt ideas - through the alchemy of words and pictures started to become evident to him, and he has never looked back. Zettwoch drew a strip for the school paper and edited the campus comix anthology, and eventually started stapling together homemade booklets full of his own comics, about things like professional wrestling, childhood gangs roaming the suburbs, alien attacks on the State Fair, slot car racing and Civil War-era battleships. 
In addition to several self-published booklets, his stories have appeared in Kramers Ergot, the Drawn & Quarterly Showcase, Comic Art, Nickelodeon Magazine, Yale University Press' An Anthology of Graphic Fiction, Cartoons, and True Stories Volume 2. He is currently working on the weekly newspaper strip Amazing Facts & Beyond with fellow USS Catastrophe crew members Kevin Huizenga and Ted May, a series of screenprints commemorating St. Louis Folk Icons and gross foods, and his own comic Redbird.

Members

Reviews

As reviewer Barbara says, this is not the best in the series. Too scattered, too crammed with trivia instead of focusing on just one or two things besides how cars work. I couldn't manage to read it closely, and so won't rate. Some children with a particular interest in the subject will like it... but imo the appeal of the series has (so far in the books I've enjoyed the most) been that even the subjects that don't attract are explored so engagingly that a reader gets sucked in. I didn't connect with this, even though I do have a bit of interest in learning a bit about cars. Sigh.… (more)
 
Flagged
Cheryl_in_CC_NV | 2 other reviews | Oct 18, 2024 |
Highly informative. Every term that is commonly discussed in my bridge design class was talked about for at least a little bit in this book. I was surprised by how in-depth some topics got, but it was quite good to see.
However, the art was a mess. It was super hard to follow due to so much *movement* and colors. There were dialogue boxes everywhere with random facts squeezed in wherever there was room. It was just too much.

3 Stars
 
Flagged
libraryofemma | 4 other reviews | Apr 18, 2024 |
Such a fun way to learn about Bridges. From what they’re made of, how they’re made, and the different stresses they’re under, to the various types of bridges.
 
Flagged
wallace2012 | 4 other reviews | Nov 4, 2023 |
A fun survey of the different ways to build bridges by way of a global tour of famous bridges with a team of four fictional characters. It was nice to see that one of the team was an older woman who was not someone's mother or grandmother but just a person who likes bridges. I could have done with a few less puns, but I was interested in all the bridges and the information being presented.

I found it a bit ironic that a book about structures was often lacking in structure itself, with many pages having panels and info dump captions with no set viewing flow or reading order.… (more)
 
Flagged
villemezbrown | 4 other reviews | Sep 18, 2022 |

Awards

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Statistics

Works
13
Also by
7
Members
210
Popularity
#105,678
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
9
ISBNs
11
Languages
1

Charts & Graphs